Contact us on (02) 8445 2300
For all customer service and order enquiries

Woodslane Online Catalogues

9780252044236 Add to Cart Academic Inspection Copy

America's Religious Crossroads

Faith and Community in the Emerging Midwest
Description
Author
Biography
Reviews
Google
Preview
Between 1790 and 1850, waves of Anglo-Americans, African Americans, and European immigrants flooded the Old Northwest (modern-day Ohio, Indiana, Michigan, Illinois, and Wisconsin). They brought with them a mosaic of Christian religious belief. Stephen T. Kissel draws on a wealth of primary sources to examine the foundational role that organized religion played in shaping the social, cultural, and civic infrastructure of the region. As he shows, believers from both traditional denominations and religious utopian societies found fertile ground for religious unity and fervor. Able to influence settlement from the earliest days, organized religion integrated faith into local townscapes and civic identity while facilitating many of the Old Northwest's earliest advances in literacy, charitable public outreach, formal education, and social reform. Kissel also unearths fascinating stories of how faith influenced the bonds, networks, and relationships that allowed isolated western settlements to grow and evolve a distinct regional identity. Insightful and broad in scope, America's Religious Crossroads illuminates the integral relationship between communal and spiritual growth in early Midwestern history.
Stephen T. Kissel is an assistant professor of history at Oakland City (Indiana) University.
"An important work. Kissel demonstrates the commonalities in the processes of community organization--domestic devotion, church-building, schooling, discipline, and civic engagement--shared across the religious faiths in the first generation of Euro-American settlement of the Old Northwest."--Kyle Roberts, author of Evangelical Gotham: Religion and the Making of New York City, 1783-1860
Google Preview content